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Overview

When otherworldly beings start falling from the sky, it seems like the end of days are nearbut for one girl, it’s just the beginning of an adventure that will change her life.

Jaya's life has completely fallen apart. Her mother is dead, her dad is on an obsessive wild goose chase, and mysterious winged beings are falling from the sky. For the past nine months, none of the them have survived the plummet to Earth, but when a female being lands near Jayaand is still aliveshe doesn’t call the authorities. She hides the being and tries to nurse her back to health.

Set against the backdrop of a society trying to come to grips with the possibility of a world beyond, Out of the Blue is the story of how one unexpected turn of events can put you on a path toward healing.

Product Details

About the Author

Sophie Cameron is a Scottish writer. She attended the University of Edinburgh and is now based in Spain, where she spends her time reading, running, and learning lots of languages. Out of the Blue is her first novel.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

Another Being falls as we're driving into Edinburgh. Not here — that would be lucky, and luck doesn't run in the Mackenzie family.

"Number eighty-five!" Rani shouts. "Just landed two minutes ago!"

She leans between the front seats, waving her phone like a newsboy hawking the evening paper. On the screen, a slim, copper-colored woman lies slumped over a pile of broken wood and burst watermelons. Golden blood trickles out from under the debris, tracing shimmering lines in the dust.

"Where is that?" I ask. Perry, our West Highland terrier, raises her head off my lap for a look, then gives a disinterested ruff and goes back to bird-watching through the car window.

"Malaysia again," Rani says. "Some market near Kuala Lumpur."

At least the Falls have improved my sister's geography; she was still calling it "Koala Lumper" last month. She taps the screen and a pixelated video stutters into action. The Being is only visible for a second before the crowd swoops. Tourists form a heaving scrum around the body; a woman emerges red-faced and grinning, clutching a handful of feathers. My stomach churns. I've seen dozens of clips like this — everybody has, by now — but they still make me want to throw up.

Dad's head swings between the video and the rain-spattered windscreen. "Is it badly damaged? Masculine or feminine?"

It. Always "it," not he or she, and "masculine" or "feminine" to describe how they look — as if the Beings were a style of jeans or a Spanish noun. The papers talk about them the same way; it's their way of making them seem less human. It's Dad's way of rationalizing his obsession with them.

"She's a woman, if that's what you mean," I say. "Besides, she's not just damaged, she's dead. No one could survive a fall that far."

"We'll see." Dad gives me one of those infuriatingly patronizing smiles that he does so well, and I have to physically bite my tongue to stop myself from snapping at him. Behind us, Rani keeps tapping through photos on Wingpin or 247being or one of the other hundred or so apps she's downloaded.

"This one looks young." She nudges her glasses up her nose. "Like, seventeen or eighteen."

"You're judging by human standards, though, pet," Dad says. "We don't know how time affects their bodies yet. It's possible that a Being who looks twenty in our terms could be a hundred, maybe even a thousand years old."

He launches into yet another speech about yet another theory, and yet again, I don't give a crap. Ever since the first Being fell almost eight months ago, our house has been like the Michael Mackenzie Center for Really Boring Theological Research. I can't even remember the last time he asked if Rani had lunch money or if I'd done my homework. He's too busy cutting articles out of newspapers, sticking pins and Post-its onto maps, chatting with Wingdings — a not-so-polite term for angel chasers — in Germany and New Zealand and Japan.

"At the moment it's difficult due to the different chemical composition of their teeth, but scientists think they may be able to calculate their ages by the end of this year ..."

He natters on and on, getting so caught up in his tales that he misses the change of the traffic lights and a pissed-off lady in a 4x4 beeps her horn at him. Rani nods and "mmms" and "uh-huhs" along. I'm pretty sure that even she, eleven-time winner of Daddy's Girl of the Year, can't actually be interested in the levels of linoleic acid in the Beings' fingernails, but she puts on a good act.

I stick my earbuds in and gaze out of the window, nodding along to imaginary music. (My iPod ran out of battery just before we passed Pitlochry, but I've learned it's easier to pretend I can't hear Dad's ramblings.) Outside, the drizzly city streets pass by in a blur. Seagulls swoop across the pale gray sky, on the hunt for food. Perry whines and scratches at the door.

"Almost there, Per," I murmur, stroking the white fur of her back. "Just ten more minutes."

I know how she feels. We've spent five hours in Dad's stuffy Renault Clio, stuck in traffic on the A9 from Inverness to Edinburgh. It's a shitty way to spend the summer holidays, but neither of us had any choice in the matter.

In hindsight, I should have known something was up when I woke to the smell of pancakes last Saturday. It was the first time Dad had cooked in months; ever since the Falls started, we've lived on a diet of microwave dinners, cereal, and takeaway pizzas. Just as Rani and I had finished drenching our plates in maple syrup, he gave a nervous cough.

"How would you two feel about going down to Edinburgh for a few weeks? I think ..." He was trying to sound casual, but I could tell from his hesitation that I wasn't going to like what he had to say. "I think I could catch a Being there."

My food went cold as I listened, openmouthed, to his plan. He'd done some "research" (i.e., chatting with other Wingdings on CherubIM), and based on the fact that southeast Scotland has had the highest number of Falls in the world, had "come to the conclusion" (made a wild guess) that another one was due to land in Edinburgh "within the next few weeks" (at some point in the future, or possibly never — he'd figure out the details later).

"Think about it, girls," he said. "We'd finally be able to find out where they're coming from and why they're falling."

I put up a fight. Dad pretended to listen, but when I finally ran out of reasons why this was the stupidest idea since chocolate teapots, he just smiled and ruffled my hair.

"I know it's a long shot, Jaya," he said, "but I really need to do this."

The car glides through a puddle, splashing the windows with murky rainwater. My phone buzzes. I know it won't be from Leah, but my heart leaps with hope all the same. Instead, I find Emma's name on the screen.

Look what sad sausages we are without you! Attached is a photo of her and Sam pretending to cry, their frowns hidden behind curved hot dogs. The sky above them is bright blue, perfect weather for a barbecue. They're only two hundred miles away, but suddenly the space between here and home seems infinite.

I'm tapping out my reply when Rani pipes up with another update. My sister is on constant Being-watch. She could tell you when and where each one fell, what he or she looked like, sometimes even how much their blood and feathers sold for. Personally I think there's something kind of creepy about an eleven-year-old trawling the internet for news of dead bodies, but Dad finds it useful.

"Listen to this," she says. "'Today's news means that seven Beings have now landed in Malaysia. The only other country to have hosted as many Falls is Scotland, also with seven; Russia has seen five, and Algeria four.'" I twist in my seat to face Dad. "What if you got it wrong? What if the next one falls in Malaysia? I mean, they've had just as many, so it's just as likely, right?" I kick my right foot onto the dashboard, jab a toe at the sealskin-colored sky. "Maybe we should be on our way to Kuala Lumpur right now. At least it'd be sunny there."

"Malaysia's a lot bigger than Scotland, Jaya," Dad says, swatting my shoes away. "Plus, the Falls over there have been scattered all around the country, whereas here they've had seven within thirty miles of the city. There's no comparison. If I'm going to catch one anywhere, it'll be in Edinburgh."

I grit my teeth, trying to still the anger bubbling up inside me. He's so stupid. This whole "plan" is so ridiculous. You can't catch a Being. You just can't. They fall at unbelievable speeds. They've smashed through buildings, turned highways into craters. One caused a mini tidal wave when she fell in the South Pacific, and another killed a woman when he landed on her in a town square in Armenia. It's not a bloody Looney Tunes cartoon: you can't stick a trampoline under them and spring them back to safety.

Nobody knows when the next one will fall. Sometimes three will tumble down in one day, and sometimes weeks will go by before another appears. There are scientific and religious institutions pouring billions into working out a pattern, but they haven't even come close to finding one. It's not like Dad, former sales and marketing manager for Tomlinson Cigarettes, now stay-at-home layabout, is going to be the one to crack the code.

He makes a right turn onto a brightly lit street of shops and restaurants. Outside Pizza Express, a man in a kilt and tinfoil wings is playing something that sounds vaguely like Robbie Williams's "Angels" on the bagpipes. Dad sings along, drumming his fingers on the steering wheel. Rani joins in for the chorus. They belt it out together, carefree and off-key, the excitement crackling off them like static. A dash of pity simmers with my anger. He really thinks he can do this.

He actually thinks he's going to catch an angel.

CHAPTER 2

The flat that Dad has rented is a dump. The kitchen is Barbie-size, the bathroom walls are cloudy with damp, and the living-room carpet looks like somebody's gone all Jackson Pollock with a bottle of red wine. Behind the smell of chemical lemon cleaning products, there's a stubborn undercurrent of beer, weed, and takeaway pizza.

"I rent it out to students during term time," says Shona, our landlady for the next few weeks. "Gives the place a youthful energy."

She fixes me with a wide mulberry smile. She's white, fiftysomething, and looks just like an aubergine: skinny on top, round on the bottom, and purple all over. Baggy violet trousers, an indigo blouse, hair the exact shade of grape juice. At first I thought it might be a cult uniform, but then she told me I had "aggressive red tones in my aura," so I think she might just be a bit odd.

"I'm sure you'll be comfortable," she says as she leads us back to the living room. "It's small, but the chi flows very well."

"It's great," Dad says. He hasn't noticed the scowl on my face, or that Rani has pulled the collar of her T-shirt over her nose to block out the smell seeping from the sofa. "Reminds me of my uni days."

For Dad, this flat is yet more proof that his angel-chasing plan is destined to succeed. Just a few days ago, he was frantically searching hostels and campsites — with the festival a couple of weeks away, most accommodations in Edinburgh have been booked for months. Shona's place was, too, until one of the acrobats she'd rented it to broke his ankle tripping over a paving slab and the duo had to cancel.

"And it's just a few hundred feet from St. Giles' Cathedral!" Dad said as he eagerly sent off the deposit. "Being number eight fell there on New Year's Day, remember? That has to be a sign!"

Now, in the living room, he goes to the window and pushes it open. "You can see it from here! Look, Ran, see the scaffolding?" He twists back to look at Shona, a stupid grin on his face. "If this doesn't help my research, I don't know what will."

Shona nods gravely. "Aye, I find the atmosphere in this part of the city very vitalizing. It's sure to inspire you." Her eyebrows — also purple — rise slightly. "So, is it just the three of you?" I shoot her a dirty look. This again. I'd noticed a split second of confusion in her eyes as she opened the door, wondering how my pale, blond father could have two brown daughters. It quickly faded as she worked it out, but now she's looking for the missing part of the set. It happens a lot when we we're out with Dad, sometimes accompanied by a bunch of nosy questions. I've always hated when people do that. Since Mum's accident, it's felt even worse.

To my relief, Dad changes the subject without answering. Soon they're talking about his research and about the trip that Shona's taking to a silent retreat in Italy next week. I leave them to their small talk and wander off to the room that Rani and I will be sharing for the next few weeks. Cucumber-green walls, gray metal bunk beds, three dried-up ferns in one corner. My heart sinks a second time as I dump my bag on the floor.

"I call top bunk!"

Rani scrambles up the ladder and dives onto the bed, tossing her spindly legs into the air. She's barely hit the mattress before she whips out her phone again.

"Guess what? They think number eighty-five could be the sister of the Being who fell in Greenland in April. Look, they're like twins!"

She holds out the phone to show me, but I swat it away and go to the window, gazing down at the bustling street five floors below us. I miss my room back home already. It's one of the few places in the world where I can escape the news, photos, adverts, nonstop mindless 24/7 chatter about the Beings. Not much chance of that here.

"Number eighty-five also landed at the same longitude as the Being in Laos." Rani taps on another link, ignoring the fact that I'm ignoring her. "Isn't that interesting?" I bump my head against the windowpane. Raindrops race down the glass, sketching ghostly rivers over my vision. "Fascinating, Ran. Utterly fascinating."

It poured last time we came to Edinburgh, too. That was two years ago, during the Fringe, the huge arts and theater festival that happens here every August. Never one to be put off by a "bit of drizzle," Mum dragged us all over town watching all the street artists: a cappella groups and contortionists and hip-hop dancers, acrobats and fire-eaters and a tightrope-walking violinist, all scattering flyers like wedding confetti. My hair went frizzy, Perry smelled like compost, and Rani kept moaning about her wet trainers, but it was sort of fun.

"A city of spirit and spectacle," as Mum said. She was always saying stuff like that. Dad used to call her "my poetess," then laugh when she'd go off on a rant about the term being sexist.

This time round, Edinburgh is full of fake angels. Performers dressed head to toe in gold are dotted around the street, reenacting the Falls in stilted clockwork dances. Two little girls skip past Starbucks, plastic halos bobbing over their heads, and tour guides lead groups of Wingdings to and from the cathedral. The spectacle goes on, but the spirit has darkened. It's all just a way to squeeze money from dead Beings now.

"Jaya!" Rani shouts suddenly. "Jaya, look!"

I spin around. "What, Rani? What now?"

She points through the second window. I follow her stare — and my heart drops. Across the street, twenty, thirty, forty people are emerging onto the rooftop of the flats opposite ours. It's them. The Standing Fallen.

They look just like the groups on the news: a mix of ages, all dressed in stained shirts, ragged sweaters, jeans far too ripped to be fashionable. Most of the men have uncut beards, and the women's hair lies long and lank around greasy faces. One of the members, a short, squat man holding a loudspeaker, tiptoes across the ridge. He hops nimbly onto the chimney as the others inch toward the roof's edge, forming a line behind the rain gutter.

I've seen scenes like this on TV dozens of times, but it's different this close up. I'd imagined fear on their faces, panic in the air. The members slither a little as they creep over the wet tiles, but most of them don't look scared. Beneath the dirt, their expressions are cold and blank.

"Jaya!" Rani grips the edge of the bunk bed. "They have kids with them!"

My mouth goes dry. She's right: there's a boy of around thirteen up there, and a younger girl, maybe seven or eight. Unlike the adults, they're obviously terrified. The girl has her eyes squeezed shut tight, as if making a wish, while the boy stares at the crowd gathering seven stories below. His legs are shaking so much, I'm sure he'll slip. A small woman holds one of their hands in each of hers, but she doesn't comfort them. She doesn't even look at them.

"I'm going to get Dad." Rani slides down and runs out of the room. The man by the chimney switches his loudspeaker on. It gives a sickening squeal, but he doesn't flinch.

"Sinners." His voice is loud but calm, more a statement than an accusation. "For nearly eight months, angels have fallen from the skies. Not for millennia has the Creator sent so clear a sign of his wrath — but does Man repent? Does he scrub his soul of spite and greed, devote himself to a higher cause? No. He picks like a vulture at the bodies of angels, hungry for naught but blood and gold."

I tell myself to turn away, just like I do when they come on TV, but my body won't comply. Though their displays make my stomach churn and my head spin, there's something about the Standing Fallen that forces me to keep looking. I've watched and rewatched the videos. I know the speeches by heart.

The man on the rooftop pauses for effect, just like all the leaders do. It's hard to tell how old he is. His beard hides one half of his face, and the other is coated in a thick layer of grime.

Editorial Reviews

03/12/2018Eight months ago, angellike creatures known as “Beings” started plummeting to Earth and dying on impact. Nobody knows where the Beings are from or why they are crashing, but grieving widower Michael Mackenzie is determined to catch one mid-fall so that he can get some answers. Michael is convinced the next arrival will happen in Edinburgh, so he and his daughters, 16-year-old Jaya and 11-year-old Rani, move there for the summer. Jaya is out for a walk when a Being lands nearby—injured, but alive. Rather than tell her dad and risk the Being’s exploitation, Jaya and her new friends, Allie and Calum, decide to help it heal and send it home. Equal parts humorous fish-out-of-water story and poignant coming-of-age tale, this fantasy-tinged debut from Scottish author Cameron examines questions of faith, agency, morality, and mortality. Mourning her mother, neglected by her father, and rejected by her first-ever girlfriend, Jaya is a vividly sketched, relatable character whose brave decisions encourage readers to embrace life and be true to themselves. Ages 14–up. Agent: Hellie Ogden, Janklow & Nesbit. (May)

"An explanation for the Beings and the falling is never given, an ambiguity that allows readers to focus less on the fantastical details and more on the impact of loss and the uncertainty it leaves behind." -BCCB

"Equal parts humorous fish-out-of-water story and poignant coming-of-age tale... Jaya is a vividly sketched, relatable character whose brave decisions encourage readers to embrace life and be true to themselves." -Publishers Weekly

From the Publisher

★ 04/01/2018Gr 9 Up—When the first Being crashed to Earth in December, it was brushed off as a hoax. Nine months later, by the 87th incident, the phenomenon has reached cult status around the globe, and Jaya's father has become a true Wingding, ignoring his children and devoting his life to researching each occurrence in order to be present at the next one. He rents a flat for the family in Edinburgh, where he has determined the next Being will land. Jaya, who has been caught in her own personal hell since her mother's death, finds her life changing even more when a Being survives its Fall in front of her. Jaya decides to find a hiding place in order to try and help the angel-like creature. She reluctantly enlists two other teens, siblings Allie and Calum, and they name it Teacake. The group's interactions with Teacake and the Standing Fallen cult present a smart social commentary in a well-written and engrossing story of death, grief, and friendship. Readers will enjoy Jaya's emotional journey as she tries to atone for the certainty that she is to blame for her mother's death by saving Teacake. This is a smart balance of realism and fantasy with well-rounded characters. Allie has cystic fibrosis; her recent brush with death and her burgeoning romance with Jaya, who is Sri Lankan and white, add more layers to the group's dynamic and the novel's weighty themes of life, death, and the miraculous. VERDICT A first purchase for high school and public library collections.—Betsy Fraser, Calgary Public Library, Canada

School Library Journal

★ 2018-03-05When angelic Beings inexplicably start plummeting to Earth, humans everywhere read meaning into these events.While religious cults form in the wake of the Beings' arrival, those dubbed "Wingdings" join ranks online to share sightings, auction off wing feathers, and plot how to capture one alive and reap a reward. Jaya Mackenzie, a 17-year-old from rural Scotland, is grieving the recent death of her Sri Lankan-British mother and worrying about her father, a white Scottish man consumed by Being mania. Believing the next colorful, metallic, gender-neutral angel will fall in Edinburgh, he quits his job and takes Jaya and her younger sister, Rani, to live in a run-down student flat in the city. After meeting local twins Allie and Calum, who are protesting the commodification and exploitation of the Beings, Jaya falls hard for Allie while also missing her girlfriend, who has been incommunicado since her mother whisked her out of town. She also needs to decide whether she can trust the twins—not to mention her own family—when she happens upon the first Being to survive a crash landing on Earth. Touches of humor (Jaya names "her" Being Teacake due to her sweet tooth) lighten the story, and the expert pacing is complemented by well-rounded character development.A strong infusion of magic and wonder distinguish this debut novel. (Magical realism. 12-18)

Most Helpful Customer Reviews

Out of the Blue is a pretty underrated dystopian-like, stand-alone novel! It follows the narrative of Jaya, a biracial girl who recently lost her mother and is dealing with the aftermath, as well as the sudden appearance of “Beings,” - or angels - that have started falling out of the sky. Although this book was on the short side, it was still a beautifully-written story about love and loss, trust and hope. The character relationships were wonderfully explored, although I wish there was a bit more, if only because we only get to see them for a short time. Nonetheless, I would recommend this story for YA contemporary readers who are here for tremendous character growth and loving relationships!

Bran-OneLastChapter

More than 1 year ago

Sometimes I like to step outside of my literary comfort zone and try something different. I normally do not like books about fallen angels or overt romantic notions. Honestly, it was also due in part to the cover as well because I love feathers. I am so glad that I decided to take the plunge and request this debut novel written by Sophie Cameron!
I was totally delighted when we got to see the angels and their descriptions have them multicolored feathers with the rosy palette instead of the traditional all white or all black feathers bathed in ethereal light. I was really sad when people pluck their feathers out and started selling them because it kind of felt disrespectful to the beautiful fallen beings.
The angels started to fall 10 days after Jaya’s mother passes away but the Angels are not like the normal fallen angels in stories past. They are truly dead and bleed gold and blood up on the streets. As a true testament to how messed up the world really is, the author created huge followings and cults revolving around the fallen angels called “Wingdings” who see the Angels as a sign the world is going to end.
The characters of the story are well-versed and very appealing in the sense that it’s easy to love them. Also, I like that the author jumped on the LGBT/Diversity aspect wagon to ensure that we have well-rounded characters within her intricate new world! The book features a bisexual girl who has a chronic illness as well as a gay girl with a multicultural ethnic background and the wonderous variety of characters did not stop there! Each character was so well thought out and had such vivacious dispositions that they easily took over some of the spots in my Top 20 Characters of the year! I love the message that the author was trying to convey about people with disabilities just being regular people and living day-to-day but was glad to see that the author didn’t take the Fault in Our Stars approach and kill off characters who are suffering with chronic illnesses at the end.
Jaya is so lost after her mother’s death and she is utterly disgusted with the actions and nearsightedness of all of the cults. To Jaya, the beings are just a different type of people and it makes her angry that no one else portrays them in such a manner. I liked her relationship with her father and the ending almost destroyed me! (But in the best ways!) I liked the genuine relationship between Allie and Jaya because it lacked the insta-love trope but there could have been more of more attraction between the pairing. I think I was more forgiving with their relationship than I would have been with a normal male-female pairing because they already have enough faux pas to overcome without having outside criticism picking apart their delicate relationship.
Teacake, the angel featured in the story, was probably my favorite character described in the book! I am totally envious of her gorgeous wings! Though I have to say that the blurb made it feel like Jaya and the angel would be the ones in the relationship. So that could be better described.
Overall, I think if some potential readers can get over their -Oh! This is a LGBT related book with a girl on girl love- short mindedness and embraces the total story as a whole, this book could be a huge crowd-pleaser for many years to come! (Movie deal? Yes! I think so!)
I will totally recommend this book to anyone who likes angel stories because it’s probably the best Angel related book that I have ever read. As I mentioned b